Amongst the Establishment Prof. Stephen Cohen is a voice in the wilderness - one of sanity and truth.
This latest interview with Thom Hartmann provides an excellent summing up of events since August that have seen a reversal in the fate of the self-defence forces in eastern Ukraine.
Plus, Obama, the Nobel peace prize laureat is set to spend 1 trillion on nuclear weapons in an effort to revive the arms race.
This latest interview with Thom Hartmann provides an excellent summing up of events since August that have seen a reversal in the fate of the self-defence forces in eastern Ukraine.
Plus, Obama, the Nobel peace prize laureat is set to spend 1 trillion on nuclear weapons in an effort to revive the arms race.
Is a Ukraine Ceasefire Real?
- Thom Hartmann and Stephen F Cohen
Patriotic
Heresy vs. the New Cold War
Stephen
F. Cohen
27
August, 2014
I
prepared the text below for remarks to the annual US-Russia Forum in
Washington, DC, held in the Hart Senate Office Building (though not
under official auspices) on June 16. Obliged to abridge my text to
the time allocated to speakers, I have restored the deletions here
and spelled out a number of my impromptu comments. In addition, I
refer to a few subsequent developments to illustrate some of my
themes.—S.F.C.
We
meet today during the worst and potentially most dangerous
American-Russian confrontation in many decades, probably since the
Cuban missile crisis of 1962. The Ukrainian civil war, precipitated
by the unlawful change of government in Kiev in February, is already
growing into a proxy US-Russian war. The seemingly unthinkable is
becoming imaginable: an actual war between NATO, led by the United
States, and post-Soviet Russia.
Certainly,
we are already in a new Cold War, which escalating sanctions will
only deepen, institutionalize and prolong—one potentially more
dangerous than its US-Soviet predecessor, which the world barely
survived. This is so for several reasons:
§
The epicenter of the new Cold War is not in Berlin but on Russia's
borders, in Ukraine, a region absolutely essential in Moscow's view
to its national security and even to its civilization. This means
that the kinds of miscalculations, mishaps and provocations the world
witnessed decades ago will be even more fraught with danger. (The
mysterious shoot-down of a Malaysian jetliner over eastern Ukraine in
July was an ominous example. The military threats in August
surrounding Russia's humanitarian convoy sent to the Donbass cities
of Luhansk and Donetsk, and Kiev's simultaneous attempt to take those
cities, are others.)
§
An even graver risk is that the new Cold War may tempt the use of
nuclear weapons in a way the US-Soviet one did not. I have in mind
the argument made by some Moscow military strategists that if
directly threatened by NATO's superior conventional forces, Russia
may resort to its much larger arsenal of tactical nuclear weapons.
(The ongoing US/NATO encirclement of Russia with bases, as well as
land- and sea-based missile-defense weapons, only increases this
possibility.)
§
Yet another risk factor is that the new Cold War lacks the mutually
restraining rules that developed during the forty-year Cold War,
especially after the Cuban missile crisis. Indeed, highly charged
suspicions, resentments, misconceptions and misinformation both in
Washington and Moscow today may make such mutual restraints even more
difficult. The same is true of the surreal demonization of Russia's
leader, Vladimir Putin—a kind of personal vilification without any
real precedent in the past, at least after Stalin's death. (Henry
Kissinger has pointed out that the "demonization of Vladimir
Putin is not a policy; it is an alibi for the absence of one." I
think it is worse: an abdication of real analysis and rational
policy-making.)
§
Finally, the new Cold War may be more perilous because, also unlike
its forty-year-long predecessor, there is no effective American
opposition—not in the administration, Congress, the establishment
media, universities, think tanks or the general public.
In
this regard, we need to understand our circumstances. We—opponents
of the US policies that have contributed so woefully to the current
crisis—are few in number, without influential supporters and
unorganized. I am old enough to know our position was very different
in the 1970s and '80s, when we struggled for what was then called
détente. We were a minority, but a substantial minority with allies
in high places, even in Congress and the State Department. Our views
were solicited by mainstream newspapers, television and radio. In
addition to grassroots support, we even had our own lobbying
organization in Washington, the American Committee on East-West
Accord, whose board included corporate CEOs, political figures,
prominent academics and statesmen of the stature of George Kennan.
We
have none of that today. We have no access to the Obama
administration, virtually none to Congress, which is a bipartisan
bastion of Cold War politics, and very little to the mainstream
media. (Since the Ukrainian crisis deepened, does anyone recall
reading our views on the editorial or op-ed pages of The New York
Times, The Washington Post or The Wall Street Journal—or seeing
them presented on MSNBC or the Fox News Channel, which differ little
in their unbalanced blame-Russia broadcasts?) We do have access to
important alternative media, but they are not considered
authoritative, or even essential, inside the Beltway. In my long
lifetime, I do not recall such a failure of American democratic
discourse in any comparable time of crisis. (Gilbert Doctorow, an
American specialist on Russia and experienced multinational corporate
executive living in Belgium, is trying to create a US-European
version of the Committee on East-West Accord.)
In
my limited remaining time, I will speak generally about this dire
situation—almost certainly a fateful turning point in world
affairs—in my own three capacities: as a participant in what little
mainstream media debate has been permitted; as a longtime scholarly
historian of Russia and of US-Russian relations; and as an informed
observer who believes there is still a way out of this terrible
crisis.
About
my episodic participation in the very limited mainstream media
discussion, I will speak in a more personal way than I usually do.
From the outset, I saw my role as twofold. Recalling the American
adage "There are two sides to every story," I sought to
explain Moscow's view of the Ukrainian crisis, which is almost
entirely missing in mainstream coverage. (Without David Johnson's
indispensable daily Russia List, non-Russian readers would have
little access to alternative perspectives. John Mearsheimer's article
in the September-October issue of Foreign Affairs is an important
exception.) What, for example, did Putin mean when he said Western
policy-makers were "trying to drive us into some kind of
corner," "have lied to us many times" and "have
crossed the line" in Ukraine? Second, having argued since the
1990s, in my books and Nation articles, that Washington's bipartisan
Russia policies could lead to a new Cold War and to just such a
crisis, I wanted to bring my longstanding analysis to bear on today's
confrontation over Ukraine.
As
a result, I have been repeatedly assailed—even in purportedly
liberal publications—as Putin's No. 1 American "apologist,"
"useful idiot," "dupe," "best friend"
and, perhaps a new low in immature invective, "toady." I
expected to be criticized, as I was during nearly twenty years as a
CBS News commentator, but not in such personal and scurrilous ways.
(Something has changed in our political culture, perhaps related to
the Internet.)
Until
now, I have not bothered to reply to any of these defamatory attacks.
I do so today because I now think they are directed at several of us
in this room, indeed at anyone critical of Washington's Russia
policies, not just me. (Not even Kissinger or President Reagan's
enormously successful ambassador to Moscow, Jack Matlock, have been
entirely immune.) Re-reading the attacks, I have come to the
following conclusions:
§
None of these character assassins present any factual refutations of
anything I have written or said. They indulge only in ad hominem
slurs based on distortions and on the general premise that any
American who seeks to understand Moscow's perspectives is a "Putin
apologist" and thus unpatriotic. Such a premise only abets the
possibility of war.
§
Some of these writers, or people who stand behind them, are longtime
proponents of the twenty-year US policies that have led to the
Ukrainian crisis. By defaming us, they seek to obscure their
complicity in the unfolding disaster and their unwillingness to
rethink it. Failure to rethink dooms us to the worst outcome.
§
Equally important, however, these kinds of neo-McCarthyites are
trying to stifle democratic debate by stigmatizing us in ways that
make us unwelcome on mainstream broadcasts and op-ed pages and to
policy-makers. They are largely succeeding.
Let
us be clear. This means that we, not the people on the left and the
right who defame us, are the true American democrats and the real
patriots of US national security. We do not seek to ostracize or
silence the new cold warriors, but to engage them in public debate.
And we, not they, understand that current US policy may have
catastrophic consequences for international and American security.
The perils and costs of another prolonged Cold War will afflict our
children and grandchildren. If nothing else, this reckless policy,
couched even at high levels in the ritualistic demonizing of Putin,
is already costing Washington an essential partner in the Kremlin in
vital areas of US security—from Iran, Syria and Afghanistan to
efforts to counter nuclear proliferation and international terrorism.
But,
I should add, we are also to blame for the one-sided, or nonexistent,
debate. As I said, we are not organized. Too often, we do not
publicly defend each other, though I am personally grateful to James
Carden, Gilbert Doctorow and Robert Legvold for having come to my
defense. And often we do not speak boldly enough. (We should not
worry, for example, if our arguments sometimes coincide with what
Moscow is saying; doing so results in self-censorship.)
Indeed,
some people who privately share our concerns—again, in Congress,
the media, universities and think tanks—do not speak out at all.
For whatever reason—concern about being stigmatized, about their
career, personal disposition—they are silent. But in our democracy,
where the cost of dissent is relatively low, silence is no longer a
patriotic option. (Personally, as an American, I have come to feel
this more strongly, to the point of moral indignation, as I watch the
US-backed regime in Kiev inflict needless devastation, a humanitarian
disaster and possibly war crimes on its own citizens in eastern
Ukraine.)
But,
I must also emphasize, we should exempt from this imperative young
people, who have more to lose. A few have sought my guidance, and I
always advise, "Even petty penalties for dissent in regard to
Russia could adversely affect your career. At this stage of life,
your first obligation is to your family and thus to your future
prospects. Your time to fight lies ahead."
Finally,
in connection with our struggle for a wiser American policy, I have
come to another conclusion: most of us were taught that moderation in
thought and speech is always the best principle. But in a fateful
crisis such as the one now confronting us, moderation for its own
sake is no virtue. It becomes conformism, and conformism becomes
complicity.
I
recall this issue being discussed long ago in a very different
context—by Soviet-era dissidents when I lived among them in Moscow
in the 1970s and '80s. A few in our ranks who know that history
(including Edward Lozansky, a former Soviet dissident, longtime US
citizen and Reagan Republican, and the organizer of today's event)
have recently called us "American dissidents." The analogy
is imperfect: my Soviet friends had far fewer possibilities for
dissent and risked much worse consequences.
But
the analogy is instructive. Soviet dissidents were protesting an
entrenched orthodoxy of dogmas, vested interests and ossified
policy-making, which is why they were denounced as heretics by Soviet
authorities and media. Since the 1990s, beginning with the Clinton
administration, exceedingly unwise notions about post-Soviet Russia
and the political correctness of US policy have congealed into a
bipartisan American orthodoxy. The natural, historical response to
orthodoxy is heresy. So let us be patriotic heretics, regardless of
personal consequences, in the hope that many others will join us, as
has often happened in history.
I
turn now, in my capacity as a historian, to that orthodoxy. The late
Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan famously said: "Everyone is
entitled to his own opinions, but not to his own facts." The new
Cold War orthodoxy rests almost entirely on fallacious opinions. Five
of those fallacies are particularly important today.
Fallacy
No. 1: Ever since the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, Washington has
treated post-Communist Russia generously as a desired friend and
partner, making every effort to help it become a democratic,
prosperous member of the Western system of international security.
Unwilling or unable, Russia rejected this American altruism,
emphatically under Putin.
Fact:
Beginning in the 1990s with the Clinton administration, every
American president and Congress has treated post-Soviet Russia as a
defeated nation with inferior legitimate rights at home and abroad.
This triumphalist, winner-take-all approach has been spearheaded by
the expansion of NATO—accompanied by non-reciprocal negotiations
and now missile defense—into Russia's traditional zones of national
security, while in reality excluding it from Europe's security
system. Early on, Ukraine and, to a lesser extent, Georgia were the
ultimate goals. As an influential Washington Post columnist explained
in 2004: "The West wants to finish the job begun with the fall
of the Berlin Wall and continue Europe's march to the east…. The
great prize is Ukraine." He was echoed in 2013, on the eve of
the current crisis, by Carl Gershman, head of the federally funded
National Endowment for Democracy: "Ukraine is the biggest
prize."
Fallacy
No. 2: There exists a "Ukrainian people" who yearn to
escape centuries of Russian influence and join the West.
Fact:
As every informed person knows, Ukraine is a country long divided by
ethnic, linguistic, religious, cultural, economic and political
differences—particularly its western and eastern regions, but not
only those. When the current crisis began in 2013, Ukraine was one
state, but it was not a single people or a united nation. Some of
these divisions were made worse after 1991 by a corrupt elite, but
most of them had developed over centuries.
Fallacy
No. 3: In November 2013, the European Union, backed by Washington,
offered Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych a benign association
with European democracy and prosperity. Yanukovych was prepared to
sign the agreement, but Putin bullied and bribed him into rejecting
it. Thus began Kiev's Maidan protests and all that has since
followed.
Fact:
The EU proposal was a reckless provocation compelling the
democratically elected president of a deeply divided country to
choose between Russia and the West. So too was the EU's rejection of
Putin's counterproposal of a Russian-European-American plan to save
Ukraine from financial collapse. On its own, the EU proposal was not
economically feasible. Offering little financial assistance, it
required the Ukrainian government to enact harsh austerity measures
and would have sharply curtailed its longstanding and essential
economic relations with Russia. Nor was the EU proposal entirely
benign. It included protocols requiring Ukraine to adhere to Europe's
"military and security" policies—which meant in effect,
without mentioning the alliance, NATO. In short, it was not Putin's
alleged "aggression" that initiated today's crisis but
instead a kind of velvet aggression by Brussels and Washington to
bring all of Ukraine into the West, including (in the fine print)
into NATO.
Fallacy
No. 4: Today's civil war in Ukraine was caused by Putin's aggressive
response to the peaceful Maidan protests against Yanukovych's
decision.
Fact:
In February 2014, the radicalized Maidan protests, strongly
influenced by extreme nationalist and even semi-fascist street
forces, turned violent. Hoping for a peaceful resolution, European
foreign ministers brokered a compromise between Maidan's
parliamentary representatives and Yanukovych. It would have left him
as president, with less power, of a coalition reconciliation
government until new elections this December. Within hours, violent
street fighters aborted the agreement. Europe's leaders and
Washington did not defend their own diplomatic accord. Yanukovych
fled to Russia. Minority parliamentary parties representing Maidan
and, predominantly, western Ukraine—among them Svoboda, an
ultranationalist movement previously anathematized by the European
Parliament as incompatible with European values—formed a new
government. They also revised the existing Constitution in their
favor. Washington and Brussels endorsed the coup and have supported
the outcome ever since. Everything that followed, from Russia's
annexation of Crimea and the spread of rebellion in southeastern
Ukraine to the civil war and Kiev's "anti-terrorist operation,"
was triggered by the February coup. Putin's actions have been mostly
reactive.
Fallacy
No. 5: The only way out of the crisis is for Putin to end his
"aggression" and call off his agents in southeastern
Ukraine.
Fact:
The underlying causes of the crisis are Ukraine's own internal
divisions, not primarily Putin's actions. The essential factor
escalating the crisis since May has been Kiev's "anti-terrorist"
military campaign against its own citizens, now mainly in Luhansk and
Donetsk. Putin influences and no doubt aids the Donbass
"self-defenders." Considering the pressure on him in
Moscow, he is likely to continue to do so, perhaps even more
directly, but he does not control them. If Kiev's assault ends, Putin
probably can compel the rebels to negotiate. But only the Obama
administration can compel Kiev to stop, and it has not done so.
In
short, twenty years of US policy have led to this fateful
American-Russian confrontation. Putin may have contributed to it
along the way, but his role during his fourteen years in power has
been almost entirely reactive—indeed, it is a complaint frequently
lodged against him by more hardline forces in Moscow.
In
politics as in history, there are always alternatives. The Ukrainian
crisis could have at least three different outcomes. In the first,
the civil war escalates and widens, drawing in Russian and possibly
NATO military forces. This would be the worst outcome: a kind of
latter-day Cuban missile crisis.
In
the second outcome, today's de facto partitioning of Ukraine becomes
institutionalized in the form of two Ukrainian states—one allied
with the West, the other with Russia—co-existing between Cold War
and cold peace. This would not be the best outcome, but neither would
it be the worst.
The
third outcome, as well as the best one, would be the preservation of
a united Ukraine. This will require good-faith negotiations between
representatives of all of Ukraine's regions, including leaders of the
rebellious southeast, probably under the auspices of Washington,
Moscow and the European Union, as Putin and his foreign minister,
Sergei Lavrov, have proposed for months.
Meanwhile,
Ukraine's tragedy continues to grow. Thousands of innocent people
have been killed or wounded, according to a UN representative, and
nearly a million others turned into refugees. It is a needless
tragedy, because rational people on all sides know the general terms
of peace negotiations:
§
Ukraine must become a federal or sufficiently decentralized state in
order to permit its diverse regions to elect their own officials,
live in accord with their local cultures, and have a say in taxation
and budgetary issues, as is the case in many federal states from
Canada to Germany. Such constitutional provisions will need to be
ratified by a referendum or a constitutional assembly, accompanied or
followed by parliamentary and presidential elections. (The rushed
presidential election in May was a mistake, effectively depriving
more than 40 percent of the country of their own candidates and thus
a real vote.)
§
Ukraine must not be aligned with any military alliance, including
NATO. (Nor must any of the other former Soviet republics now being
courted by NATO.)
§
Ukraine must be governed in ways that enable it to maintain or
develop economic relations with both Russia and the West. Otherwise,
it will never be politically independent or economically prosperous.
§
If these principles are adopted, they should be guaranteed, along
with Ukraine's present territorial integrity, by Russia and the West,
perhaps in a UN Security Council resolution.
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But
such negotiations cannot even begin until Kiev's military assault on
eastern Ukraine ends. Russia, Germany and France have repeatedly
called for a cease-fire, but the "anti-terrorist operation"
can end only where it began—in Kiev and Washington. (Though
Washington and Kiev evidently remain opposed, a cease-fire proposal
may result from German Chancellor Merkel's August 23 visit to Kiev
and a scheduled meeting between Putin and Ukrainian President
Poroshenko in Minsk.)
Alas,
there is no such leadership here in Washington. President Obama has
vanished as a statesman in the Ukrainian crisis. Secretary of State
John Kerry speaks publicly more like a secretary of war than as our
top diplomat. The Senate is preparing even more bellicose
legislation. The establishment media rely uncritically on Kiev's
propaganda and cheerlead for its policies. Unlike the scenes of
devastation in Gaza, American television rarely, if ever, shows
Kiev's destruction of Luhansk, Donetsk or other Ukrainian cities,
thereby arousing no public qualms or opposition.
And
so we patriotic heretics remain mostly alone and often defamed. The
most encouraging perspective I can offer is to remind you that
positive change in history frequently begins as heresy. Or to quote
the personal testimony of Mikhail Gorbachev, who once said of his
struggle for change inside the even more rigidly orthodox Soviet
nomenklatura: "Everything new in philosophy begins as heresy and
in politics as the opinion of a minority." As for patriotism,
here is Woodrow Wilson: "the most patriotic man is sometimes the
man who goes in the direction he thinks right even when he sees half
of the world against him.
‘Anti-nuclear’
Obama plans to spend $1 trillion on nukes
RT,
22
September, 2014
Despite
campaigning on a platform that endorsed having “a nuclear-free
world” in the not so distant future, United States President Barack
Obama is overseeing an administration that’s aim has taken another
path, the New York Times reported this week.
On
Sunday, journalists William Broad and David Sanger wrote for the
Times
that a half-decade of “political
deals and geopolitical crises”
have thrown a wrench in the works of Pres. Obama’s pre-White House
plans, as a result eviscerating his previously stated intentions of
putting America’s — and ideally the world’s — nuclear
programs on ice.
According
to the Times report, an effort to ensure that the antiquated nuclear
arsenal being held by the US remains secure has since expanded to the
point that upwards of $1 trillion dollars is now expected to be spent
on various realms of the project during the next three decades, the
likes of which are likely to keep the trove of American nukes intact
and do little to discourage other nations from doing differently.
“The
original idea was that modest rebuilding of the nation’s crumbling
nuclear complex would speed arms refurbishment, raising confidence in
the arsenal’s reliability and paving the way for new treaties that
would significantly cut the number of warheads,”
the journalists wrote. “Instead,
because of political deals and geopolitical crises, the Obama
administration is engaging in extensive atomic rebuilding while
getting only modest arms reductions in return.”
Shortly
after he first entered the oval office in early 2009, the Nobel Peace
Prize commission awarded Pres. Obama with its highest award for,
among other factors, taking a strong stance against international
nuclear procurement.
Reuters/Larry
Downing
“I’m
not naïve,”
Obama said that year. “This
goal will not be reached quickly — perhaps not in my lifetime. It
will take patience and persistence.”
After
speaking with analysts, however, the Times journalists — both
Pulitzer winners in their own right — now raise doubts that the
commander-in-chief’s campaign goals will come to fruition anytime
soon.
“With
Russia on the warpath, China pressing its own territorial claims and
Pakistan expanding its arsenal, the overall chances for Mr. Obama’s
legacy of disarmament look increasingly dim, analysts say,”
they wrote. “Congress has
expressed less interest in atomic reductions than looking tough in
Washington’s escalating confrontation with Moscow.”
Indeed,
international disputes have without a doubt raised concerns in recent
years over the nuclear programs of other nations. The Washington
Post reported
this week that Pakistan is working towards achieving the capability
to launch sea-based, short-range nuclear arms, and concurrently the
Kremlin
confirmed
that Russia is set to renew the country’s strategic nuclear forces
by 100 percent, not 70 percent as previously announced.
As
those countries ramp up their nuclear programs on their own, the
Times report cites a recent study from the Washington, DC-based
Government Accountability Office to show that the US is making more
than just a minor investment with regards to America’s nukes.
According to that report, 21 major upgrades to nuclear facilities
have already been approved, yet in the five years since Obama took
office, “the modernization
push”
to upgrade the nukes has been “poorly
managed and financially unaccountable.”
“It
estimated the total cost of the nuclear enterprise over the next
three decades at roughly $900 billion to $1.1 trillion,”
the journalists noted. “Policy
makers, the [GAO] report said, ‘are only now beginning to
appreciate the full scope of these procurement costs.’”
See
also the NYT article.U.S.
Ramping Up Major Renewal in Nuclear Arms
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